Mitt Romney Adviser On Lilly Ledbetter Act: 'He Was Opposed To It At The Time'

Source: Huffington Post

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -- Had Mitt Romney been president in 2009, he would not have signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act into law, a top adviser to the Republican nominee told The Huffington Post Tuesday night.

Now that the law has been passed, Romney has no plans to get rid of it, that adviser, Ed Gillespie, added. But Romney didn't support it while it made its way through Congress.

"The governor would not repeal the Lilly Ledbetter Act," said Gillespie, following Tuesday night's presidential debate. "He was opposed to it at the time. He would not repeal it."

The statement from Gillespie is the furthest that the Romney campaign has gone in detailing the candidate's position on the law, which allows women greater opportunity to sue over pay inequity at the workplace. Previously, the governor's campaign has said that he would not repeal the Lilly Ledbetter Act, which was the first bill President Barack Obama signed into law, while leaving unanswered whether or not he would have signed it had he been president at the time.

6. Given the fact that Gillespie said Mittens was "opposed to it at the time" and

"he did not support it while it made its way through Congress," I think the question of whether he would have signed it, if he were President, has been answered. He WOULD NOT have signed it. What's with the reporter saying it was "left unanswered?"